Web Designers
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Top 10 Web Design Mistakes
1. Legibility Problems
Bad fonts won the vote by a landslide, getting almost twice as many votes as the
#2 mistake. About two-thirds of the voters complained about small font
sizes or frozen font sizes; about one-third complained about low
contrast between text and background.
2. Non-Standard Links
Following are the five main guidelines for links:
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Make obvious what's clickable: for text links, use colored, underlined text
(and don't underline non-link text).
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Differentiate visited and unvisited links.
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Explain what users will find at the other end of the link, and include some of
the key information-carrying terms in the anchor text itself to enhance
scannability and search engine optimization (SEO). Don't use "click here" or
other non-descriptive link text.
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Avoid JavaScript or other fancy techniques that break standard interaction
techniques for dealing with links.
-
In particular, don't open pages in new windows (except for PDF files and such).
Links are the Web's number one interaction element. Violating common
expectations for how links work is a sure way to confuse and delay users, and
might prevent them from being able to use your site.
3. Flash
Despite such good intentions, most of the Flash that Web users encounter each
day is bad Flash with no purpose beyond annoying people. The one bright point
is that splash screens and Flash intros are almost extinct. They are so bad
that even the most clueless Web designers won't recommend them, even though a
few (even more clueless) clients continue to request them.
Flash is a programming environment and should be used to offer users additional
power and features that are unavailable from a static page. Flash should not be
used to jazz up a page. If your content is boring, rewrite text to make it more
compelling and hire a professional photographer to shoot better photos. Don't
make your pages move. It doesn't increase users' attention, it drives them
away; most people equate animated content with useless content
.
Using Flash for navigation is almost as bad. People prefer predictable
navigation and static menus.
4. Content That's Not Written for the Web
Writing for the Web means making content
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short,
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scannable, and
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to the point (rather than full of fluffy marketese).
Web content should also
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answer users' questions and
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use common language rather than made-up terms (this also improves search engine
visibility, since users search using their own words, not yours).
5. Bad Search
Everything else on this list is pretty easy to get right, but unfortunately
fixing search requires considerable work and an investment in better software.
It's worth doing, though, because search is a fundamental component of the Web
user experience and is getting more important every year.
6. Browser Incompatibility
During 2004, almost everybody used Internet Explorer and the business case for
supporting other browsers was getting pretty tough to defend on an ROI basis.
Today, however, enough people use Firefox (and various other minority browsers,
like Opera and Safari) that the business case is back: don't turn away
customers just because they prefer a different platform.
7. Cumbersome Forms
People complained about numerous form-related problems. The basic issue? Forms
are used too often on the Web and tend to be too big,
featuring too many unnecessary questions and options. In the long run, we need
more of an applications metaphor for Internet interaction design. For now,
users are confronted by numerous forms and we must make each encounter as
smooth as possible. There are five basic guidelines to this end:
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Cut any questions
that are not needed. For example, do you really need a salutation
(Mr/Ms/Mrs/Miss/etc.)?
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Don't make fields mandatory
unless they truly are.
-
Support autofill
to the max by avoiding unusual field labels (just use Name, Address, etc.).
-
Set the keyboard focus
to the first field when the form is displayed. This saves a click.
-
Allow flexible input of phone numbers, credit card numbers,
and the like. It's easy to have the computer eliminate characters like
parentheses and extra spaces. This is particularly important for elderly users,
who tend to suffer when sites require data entry in unfamiliar formats. Why
lose orders because a user prefers to enter a credit card number in nicely
chunked, four-digit groups rather than an undifferentiated, error-prone blob of
sixteen digits?
Forms that violate guidelines for internationalization got dinged by many
overseas users. If entering a Canadian postal code generates an error message,
you shouldn't be surprised if you get very little business from Canada.
8. No Contact Information or Other Company Info
Even though phone numbers and email addresses are the most requested forms of
contact info, having a physical mailing address on the site might be more
important because it's one of the key credibility markers. A company with no
address is not one you want to give money to.
For advice on how to best present contact info, see our usability studies of
"About Us" pages and store finders and locators.
9. Frozen Layouts with Fixed Page Widths
Complaints here fell into two categories:
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On big monitors, websites are difficult to use if they don't resize with the
window. Conversely, if users have a small window and a page doesn't use a
liquid layout, it triggers insufferable horizontal scrolling.
-
The rightmost part of a page is cut off when printing a frozen page. This is
especially true for Europeans, who use narrower paper (A4) than Americans.
Font sizes are a related issue. Assuming a site doesn't commit mistake #1 and
freeze the fonts, users with high-resolution monitors often bump up the font
size. However, if they also want to bump up the window size to make the bigger
text more readable, a frozen layout thwarts their efforts.
The very worst offenders are sites that freeze both the width and height of the
viewport when displaying information in a pop-up window. Pop-ups are a mistake
in their own right. If you must use them, don't force users to read in a tiny
peephole. At an absolute minimum, let users resize any new windows.
10. Inadequate Photo Enlargement
According to the vote count, #10 should really be about pop-ups, but I've
written a lot about them already (most recently when they were rated the #1
most hated advertising technique). Instead, I want to feature here a problem
that got a bit fewer votes, but illustrates a deeper point.
One of the long-standing guidelines for e-commerce usability is to offer users
the ability to enlarge product photos for a close-up view. Seeing a tiny detail
or assessing a texture can give shoppers the confidence they need to place an
order online.
It's gratifying that most sites obey this guideline and offer zoom features,
often denoted by a magnifying glass icon. But many sites implement the feature
wrong.
The worst mistake is when a user clicks the "enlarge photo" button and the site
simply displays the same photo. It's always a mistake to offer
no-ops that do nothing when clicked. Such do-nothing links and
buttons add clutter, waste time, and increase user confusion: What happened?
Did I do something wrong?
(An even more common no-op mistake is to have a link on the homepage that links
to the homepage itself. This was #10 on the list of most violated homepage
guidelines.)
Another mistake here that's almost as bad is when sites let users enlarge
photos, but only by a fraction. When users ask for a big photo, show them a big
photo. It's often best to offer an enlargement that fills up the most common
screen size used by your customers (1024x768 for B2C sites, at the time of this
writing). Other times, this is insufficient, and it's better to offer a range
of close-ups to give users the details they need without requiring them to
scroll a too-large photo.
Yes, initial pages should use small photos to avoid looking fluffy. Yes, you
want to be aware of download times and watch your pageweight budget. Even in
this broadband age, slow response times were #15 on the full list of design
mistakes. But, when users explicitly ask for larger pictures, they're willing
to wait for them to download -- unless that wait produces a mid-sized photo
that lacks the details they need to make a purchasing decision.
Back to Basics in Web Design
This year's list of top problems clearly proves the need to get back to Web
design basics. There's much talk about new fancy "Web 2.0" features on the
Internet industry's mailing lists and websites, as well as at conferences. But
users don't care about technology and don't especially want new features. They
just want quality improvements in the basics:
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text they can read;
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content that answers their questions;
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navigation and search that help them find what they want;
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short and simple forms (streamlined registration, checkout, and other
workflow); and
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no bugs, typos, or corrupted data; no linkrot; no outdated content.
Anytime you feel tempted to add a new feature or advanced technology to your
site, first consider whether you would get a higher ROI by spending the
resources on polishing the quality of what you already have. Most companies,
e-commerce sites, government agencies, and non-profit organizations would
contribute more to their website's business goals with better headlines than
with any new technology (aside from a better search engine, of course).